This whole "only one project is going to happen" mindset is baseless cynicism.
BSG tos was popular however it was expensive to make I think the show they replaced it with got less ratings. The RDM series got good ratings (for the Sci-Fi channel) in the early seasons but as time went on the ratings were in the toilet (Enterprise always had better ratings than BSG) but had critical acclaim.JD said:I never really got the impression either of the series were that popular. I know RDM series was a huge critical success, but I thought it's ratings were never very high. I didn't think the original was all that popular
Usually that only happens when they are developed by the same people, but I guess there's always a chance Universal could decide they want them both and make the two teams.Either one will happen and the other one won't, or neither will happen. Both won't happen, at least not in such close proximity to one another, unless we get a Dune (Villeneuve film)/Dune: The Sisterhood (HBO Max series) situation where they're connected.
Are there any examples where we've gotten an unconnected live action movie and live action TV show of the same story running at the same time? Typically if we get a movie and a show at the same time one is spin-off of the other, like the Star Trek, Star Wars, and X-Files, upcoming Gotham PD and The Batman, and the Dune movies and shows.This whole "only one project is going to happen" mindset is baseless cynicism.
Are there any examples where we've gotten an unconnected live action movie and live action TV show of the same story running at the same time?
It would still be pretty stupid to have two competing productions going in completely different directions.
According to whom?
And NBC Universal clearly believes that there's a different market for each project, or else they wouldn't be bankrolling both of them simultaneously.
By the time we see the BSG movie, the Peacock series will have long since premiered because we'll be seeing said series within the next year.
By the way, I remember they even had begun to build some sets fort the Singer/De Santo project, before shelving it.Not if they haven’t built any sets or hired any actors at this point, both projects are a way off if either gets made.
The sets and other physical effects built for the Singer/DeSanto project were destroyed as the project died in utero while its fraternal twin was born, airing on the Sci Fi Channel by year's end, 2003, backed up with financing by Sky One in the United Kingdom.
By the way, I remember they even had began to build some sets fort the Singer/De Santo project, before shelving it.
Probably the last time a TOS continuation was even considered.
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